240, my brother, you must not eat potatoes for dinner, unless it is your post-workout meal. Potatoes are one of the fastest "acting" complex carbs and are great for that window of insulin elevation right after you workout. Eating oatmeal for breakfast is great, it is a slow-digesting complex carb that will fill you up. Peas have sugar, I would avoid them. Instead eat salad, I like to eat heart of Romaine salad with either a tbsp of olive oil or 2 tbsp dressing (same fat content basically).I would suggest a large complex carb breakfast, no carb mid-morning snack, medium carb lunch from a slow-digesting complex carb source, pre-workout no carb snack, a large carb post-workout meal (like potaotes) and some no carb, or maybe low carb (like beans) meals to finish out your days.

Since you are cutting, take your protein shake with you to the gym, and drink it before you do cardio.I would suggest eating at least 2 potatoes or 3 (normal size) post-workout. Since you are not eating a simple sugar to spike your insuling (because you are cutting), you should use potatoes to do this. Your post-workout meal should be your biggest meal of the day, at least on par with your breakfast.Low-carb veggies I eat are green beans and heart of Romaine salad. I would suggest staying away from corn and peas because of their sugar content.My favorite salad is:one heart of Romaine slice up2 Tbsp Ken's Caesar dressing (same fat as olive oil)lotsa ground black peppersliced chicken breast (both cold and hot are good)I eat this with 2 Tbsp ANPB mixed w/Splenda (my dessert) pretty much everyday before I go to bed.

I am cooking and eating a ton of meat everyday. I'm leaner, my muscles have a weird hardness and shape they've never had, and I'm aggressive as hell in the gym and everywhere else.

However, I seem to be hungry every hour. Any advice for how to fill up more? I limit my carbs- usually just oatmeal for breafast, then some peas with most meals and a potato or 2 with dinner. Thanks!

What kind and how much dietary fat are you taking in?Secondly, phyillium husk (not the powder) would help too. Add a tablespoon or two to your shakes (but not if it's a PWO shake). Peas and potatos are high glycemic and not really considered veggies when it comes to nutrition (fine for PWO). A better option at other times (since it seems like you hate your veggies) would be yams/sweet potatoes (FRESH cooked). Steamed broccoli ~ lots = good veggie. 'Course ~ any greens = good thing. How 'bout some lower GI fruit(s) in the morning? Berries are very low GI and a cup of strawberries is only about 9 grams of carbs ~ 1/2 C blueberries is about 9 too.

try adding in a little more unsaturated fats. I need to add those to my diet anyway but thats just my body and everyone is different. i find if i eat a lot of protein and many times a day after a few day i have trouble being satisfied too unless i start adding a little fat like flax or olive oils.

You need some fat in your diet to slow down the absorbtion of everything you are eating.

MYTH. Sorry.

Liquid fats don't slow gastric emptying or digestion, only fats that are part of food.Adding carbs or fiber will slow it down. At least two different papers have shown that liquid and water parts of the meal separate (which makes sense: water and oil ... ) and the fat just sits on top of the liquid, affecting nothing.

Keep doing the flax oil & / or fish oil, but don't be misled into thinking they are slowing things down.

Fiber will save me anytime I have a craving, especially at night. If I'm on a pretty severe calorie resriction, one or two tablespoons of cottage cheese followed by 10 grms of sugar-free metamucil will kill any craving every time. It has an impact stabilizing your bloodsugar too so its usually a good choice.

Pay no attention to his diet. You need to eat more complex carbs, like the whole grained versions of pasta and rice. Especially the hours after your rugby training. Throughout the day, try to eat plenty of complex carbs, veggies and proteins. Make sure to eat some healthy fats, a tea spoon of flax oil will get you the Omega-3you need for the day. Finally, avoid white sugar altogether, and only eat fast carbs (with some good protein) directly after training.

That i did bro, thnks anyway. im slowly but surely try to up my portions, and keep plenty veggies etc in my diet.

I like the challenges tho, trying to get bigger and musclier (spelling, im so sorry) while also improving my speed/fitness for rugby.Its sounds daft but i am actually managing to do all of them. Im heavier/stronger and more powerful this season+faster. and i ahve a good natural fitness which i have noticed has also improved.

So my muscles are getting bigger (so the bodybuilding side is working), and i am getting fitter/faster (rugby training side is working).

It takes time and alot of hard work but i love every minute of it, and i know that putting the work in the kitchen and in training....yields results!!